Bradley Logo

Schedule of Classes

 

Spring Semester 2022

 

Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering
Joseph Chen • BECC 4236 • 309-677-2740
IME103Computer Aided Graphics (2 hours)
 01 Canceled
IME110Introduction to Computers & Computational Analysis (3 hours)
Corequisite: MTH 115 or IMT 212 or consent of instructor
 01 MW5:00 PM -6:15 PM ONLONL Megan Larke Online Course
IME200Engineering Co-Op (0 hours)
Prerequisite: Sophomore standing in the College of Engineering and Technology, 2.0 overall gradepoint average at Bradley, approval of engineering and technology Co-op coordinator and Co-op faculty advisor.
 01 *R* Arr     Julie ReyerCore: EL 
IME301Engineering Economy I (3 hours)
Prerequisite: MTH 121 or IMT 212
 02 TT1:30 PM -2:45 PM BEC3160 Greg Jetton  
IME302Introduction to Quality Engineering (3 hours)
Prerequisite: One semester college calculus.
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM BEC2132 Ye Li  
IME311Introduction to Engineering Statistical Methods (3 hours)
Prerequisite: MTH 122.
 01 TT1:30 PM -2:45 PM MOR305 John Yoo  
IME331Fundamentals of Materials Science (3 hours)
Prerequisite: CHM 110, 111; PHY 110 or PHY 107
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM MOR306 Saeed Saboury  
IME333Materials Science Laboratory (2 hours)
Prerequisite: IMT 232 or IME 331
 01 Arr     Saeed SabouryCore: WI 
IME341Introduction to Manufacturing Processes (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 103
 01 TT12:00 PM -12:50 PM BEC4140 Iqbal Shareef  
 LabA M3:00 PM -4:40 PM BEC0260 Iqbal Shareef  
IME386Industrial and Managerial Engineering (3 hours)
Prerequisite: MTH 121 or IMT 212 or Equivalent
 01 *R* MW10:30 AM -11:45 AM ONLONL Joseph Chen Online Course
IME395Solid Modeling & Rapid Prototyping (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 103, 110, 341
 01 MW12:00 PM -1:15 PM BEC2180 Ye Li  
IME401Engineering Economy II (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 301.
 01 MW12:00 PM -1:15 PM BEC1180 Fariborz Fred Tayyari  
IME409Selected Projects in Industrial & Manufacturing Engineering (1 to 6 hours)
Prerequisite: senior standing and consent of instructor.
 01 Arr  MOR001 Ye Li  
 "Optimization of MFGp"
IME412Regression and Experimental Design (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 311 with C or better or consent of instructor.
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM BEC2180 Gangjian George Guo  
IME422Manufacturing Quality Control (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 311 with C or better or consent of instructor
 01 TT1:30 PM -2:45 PM BEC2132 Ye Li  
IME443Manufacturing Processes II (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 331, IME 341, or consent of the instructor
 01 TT12:00 PM -1:15 PM BEC2259 Gangjian George Guo  
IME461Simulation of Manufacturing and Service Systems (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 361; or consent of instructor.
 01 TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM MOR305 John YooCore: EL 
IME466Facilities Planning (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 386 or consent of instructor
 01 MW10:30 AM -11:45 AM BEC3225 Gangjian George Guo  
IME468Engineering Analytics 1 (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 110
 01 MW9:00 AM -10:15 AM BEC2180 John Yoo  
IME481Lean Production Systems (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 301; IME466 or IMT 366; or consent of instructor
 01 TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM BEC2259 Joseph ChenCore: EL 
IME485Occupational Ergonomics (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 302 or IME 311, and CE 150 or IMT 222, or consent of instructor.
 01 MW3:00 PM -4:15 PM BEC4140 Fariborz Fred TayyariCore: WI 
IME499Senior Industrial Project (4 hours)
Prerequisite: 30 hours of IMET Department courses with a minimum 2.25 GPA; COM 103; consent of course coordinator.
 01 W1:20 PM -2:50 PM BEC2259 Iqbal ShareefCore: WI,EL 
 and F10:00 AM -2:50 PM             
 Friday meetings held at client location
IME501Engineering Cost Analysis (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Not open to students with credit in IME 401.
 01 MW12:00 PM -1:15 PM BEC1180 Fariborz Fred Tayyari  
IME512Regression and Experimental Design (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 311 or IME 511 or consent of instructor
 01 TT9:00 AM -10:15 AM BEC2180 Gangjian George Guo  
IME514Introduction to Operations Research (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor. Not open to students with credit in IME 313 and 314.
 01 TT3:00 PM -4:15 PM BEC4120 Fariborz Fred Tayyari  
IME522Manufacturing Quality Control (3 hours)
Prerequisite: One semester of statistics or consent of instructor. Not open to students with credit in IME 422
 01 TT1:30 PM -2:45 PM BEC2132 Ye Li  
IME561Simulation of Manufacturing & Service Systems (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 511, IME 514; or consent of instructor. Not open to students with credit in IME 461.
 01 TT10:30 AM -11:45 AM MOR305 John Yoo  
IME566Advanced Facility Planning (3 hours)
Prerequisite: IME 386 or IME 500 or consent of instructor
 01 MW10:30 AM -11:45 AM BEC3225 Gangjian George Guo  
IME568Engineering Analytics 1 (3 hours)
Prerequisite: One semester of computer programming and one semester of statistics, or consent of instructor.
 01 MW9:00 AM -10:15 AM BEC2180 John Yoo  
IME585Occupational Ergonomics (3 hours)
Prerequisite: Graduate Standing and Consent of instructor. Not open to students with credit in IME 485.
 01 MW3:00 PM -4:15 PM BEC4140 Fariborz Fred Tayyari  
 
Computer aided drafting, theory of orthographic projection, sections, auxiliaries, and basic dimensioning.
Use of various modern computing technologies, including numerical analysis software and Internet-based applications. Coding of numerical algorithms as applied to engineering functions.
Full-time cooperative education assignment for manufacturing engineering and industrial engineering students who alternate periods of full-time school with periods of full-time academic or career-related work in industry. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory.
Analysis of economic aspects of engineering decisions. Effect of interest and other cost factors on evaluation of engineering alternatives. Roles of mathematical models and other techniques in economical design and test of products. Introduction to value engineering.
Definition of quality, need for quality in products and services, methods of assuring quality, fundamentals of probability and statistics, process control methods, acceptance sampling, designing experiments, a system for quality. Not open to IME majors.
Engineering data collection and analysis; discrete and continuous probability models; confidence intervals; tests of hypotheses; regression analysis; essentials of statistically designed experiments; engineering application of statistical methods. Extensive use of statistical computer software.
Materials science in engineering. Structure of perfect solids: metals, plastics, composites, and ceramics. Structure of imperfect solids: phase equilibria; diffusion, mechanical properties, and plastic deformation; strengthening mechanisms; relation between mechanical properties and microstructural control; organic polymers; electrical conduction in materials; semi-conductors; magnetic materials.
Laboratory practices and experience for basic materials science investigations. Mechanical testing, metallographic examination and thermal treatment of metals, non-destructive and destructive testing of non-metallic materials.
A laboratory-intensive introduction to manufacturing machinery and processes, tooling, and safety. Product specification interpretation and associated planning for tooling and methods. Material removal; forming operations; casting and molding of metals and plastics; joining techniques.
Principles of IME applied to design of an organization's physical facilities and operating systems. Analysis and measurement of human work applied to work system design. Laboratory and interdisciplinary community projects.
Principles of solid modeling and 3D drafting. Solids, surfaces, wire frames, pictorial representation, advance dimensioning, tolerancing, geometric dimensioning and tolerancing, drafting for production, techniques of rapid prototyping.
Continuation of IME 301. Economic aspects of engineering decisions including techniques of obtaining cost data, product costing, and break-even analysis. Industrial practices. Cross-listed with IME 501. Not open to students with credit in IME 305.
Projects may be of an experimental, analytical, or creative nature. Course may be repeated for a maximum of 6 hours credit.
Inferential statistical analysis for two samples; Simple and multiple regression analysis and applications; Goodness of fit test; Independence test; Experimental designs for evaluating significance of main effects and interactions of multiple variables. Cross listed with IME 512.
Analysis of factors affecting product quality during manufacturing; process control charts; process capability studies; error of measurement; sampling plans; motivation programs; quality audit; organization. Cross listed with IME 522.
Principles, techniques, limitations, and applications of metal casting and non-metallic molding processes, traditional metal joining processes, fabrication, and assembly. Basic phenomena of near-net-shape manufacturing, tooling and equipment required, tolerances and economics. Emphasis on manufacturing parameters, design, and the resultant effects of material structure and properties. Lecture and Lab.
Procedures and rationale for planning, designing, and implementing computer simulation experiments used to analyze manufacturing and service systems in engineering, business, and social sciences. Use of a 3D state-of-art simulation software tool. Cross-listed with IME 561.
Physical organization of work places and departments to optimize objectives such as material movement, safety, and worker satisfaction. Review of IME methods for work place design and productivity measurement and economic decision making. Computer solutions for layout problems and mathematical models for location problems. Cross listed with IME 566.
Theoretical background of descriptive, predictive and prescriptive analytics methods and their applications to engineering. Various artificial intelligence techniques for data mining and expert system design and implementation. Computing foundations for data management and data analytics. Applications to Production Planning and Control and Inventory Management. Cross-listed with IME 568.
This course reviews the principles and concepts required for integrated production System in order to meet customer demand in production, quality, on-time delivery, and continuously reducing manufacturing cost. Emphasis is placed on applying lean manufacturing principles, simulation techniques, and Kaizen methodologies through hands-on projects. Cross listed as IME 581.
Functional anatomy and physiology of muscle and skeletal systems and their relationship to work design. Work physiology, kinesiology, and anthropometry in relation to their application in work-place design and hand-tool design. Utilization of physical work capacity and job demands for job design, personnel assignment, and assessment of work-rest scheduling. Cross listed as IME 585.
Application of engineering principles to solve a real-world problem. Student works as member of a team assigned to a problem in a manufacturing, processing, service, or governmental organization. Requires a professional written and oral report. Cross-listed with IMT 498
Economic aspects of engineering decisions including techniques of obtaining cost data, cost allocation and product costing, break-even analysis, financial analysis, and investment market.
Inferential statistical analysis for two samples; Simple and multiple regression analysis and applications; Goodness of fit test; Independence test; Experimental designs for evaluating significance of main effects and interactions of multiple variables. Cross listed with IME 412.
Mathematical model building and use of deterministic and non-deterministic tools in problem solving. Problem solving structure, linear programming, transportation and assignment algorithms, game theory, networks, branch and bound algorithms, dynamic programming, deterministic and stochastic inventory models, markov chains, queueing theory and simulation.
Analysis of factors affecting product quality during manufacturing; process control charts; process capability studies; error of measurement; sampling plans; motivation programs; quality audit; organization. A research paper required. Cross listed with IME 422
Procedures and rationale for planning, designing, and implementing computer simulation experiments used to analyze manufacturing and service systems in engineering, business, and social sciences. Use of a 3D state-of-art simulation software tool. Research projects required. Cross listed with IME 461.
Physical organization of work places and departments to optimize objectives such as material movement, safety, and worker satisfaction. Review of IE methods of work place design and productivity measurement and economic decision making. Computer solutions for layout problems and mathematical models for location problems. A research project is required. Cross listed with IME 466.
Theoretical background of descriptive, predictive and prescriptive analytics methods and their applications to engineering. Various artificial intelligence techniques for data mining and expert system design and implementation. Computing foundations for data management and data analytics. Applications to Production Planning and Control and Inventory Management. Cross-listed with IME 468.
Functional anatomy and physiology of muscle and skeletal systems and their relationship to work design. Work physiology, kinesiology, and anthropometry in relation to their application in work-place design and hand-tool design. Utilization of physical work capacity and job demands for job design, personnel assignment, and assessment of work-rest scheduling. Research projects required. Cross listed as IME 485.
This course meets a Core Curriculum requirement.
OC - Communication - Oral Communication
W1 - Communication - Writing 1
W2 - Communication - Writing 2
FA - Fine Arts
GS - Global Perspective - Global Systems
WC - Global Perspective - World Cultures
HU - Humanities
NS - Knowledge and Reasoning in the Natural Sciences
SB - Knowledge and Reasoning in the Social and Behavioral Sciences
MI - Multidisciplinary Integration
QR - Quantitative Reasoning
This section meets a Core Curriculum requirement.
EL - Experiential Learning
IL - Integrative Learning
WI - Writing Intensive
Picture of Instructor


Choose a different department

Choose a different semester

Search Class Database

Course Delivery Method Definitions